Long M W, Ward Z J, Resch S C, Cradock A L, Wang Y C, Giles C M, Gortmaker S L
Department of Prevention and Community Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
Center for Health Decision Science, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2016 Oct;40(10):1523-1528. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2016.130. Epub 2016 Jul 27.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: State-specific obesity prevalence data are critical to public health efforts to address the childhood obesity epidemic. However, few states administer objectively measured body mass index (BMI) surveillance programs. This study reports state-specific childhood obesity prevalence by age and sex correcting for parent-reported child height and weight bias.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: As part of the Childhood Obesity Intervention Cost Effectiveness Study (CHOICES), we developed childhood obesity prevalence estimates for states for the period 2005-2010 using data from the 2010 US Census and American Community Survey (ACS), 2003-2004 and 2007-2008 National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH) (n=133 213), and 2005-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) (n=9377; ages 2-17). Measured height and weight data from NHANES were used to correct parent-report bias in NSCH using a non-parametric statistical matching algorithm. Model estimates were validated against surveillance data from five states (AR, FL, MA, PA and TN) that conduct censuses of children across a range of grades.
Parent-reported height and weight resulted in the largest overestimation of childhood obesity in males ages 2-5 years (NSCH: 42.36% vs NHANES: 11.44%). The CHOICES model estimates for this group (12.81%) and for all age and sex categories were not statistically different from NHANES. Our modeled obesity prevalence aligned closely with measured data from five validation states, with a 0.64 percentage point mean difference (range: 0.23-1.39) and a high correlation coefficient (r=0.96, P=0.009). Estimated state-specific childhood obesity prevalence ranged from 11.0 to 20.4%.
Uncorrected estimates of childhood obesity prevalence from NSCH vary widely from measured national data, from a 278% overestimate among males aged 2-5 years to a 44% underestimate among females aged 14-17 years. This study demonstrates the validity of the CHOICES matching methods to correct the bias of parent-reported BMI data and highlights the need for public release of more recent data from the 2011 to 2012 NSCH.
背景/目标:特定州的肥胖患病率数据对于应对儿童肥胖流行的公共卫生努力至关重要。然而,很少有州实施客观测量体重指数(BMI)的监测项目。本研究报告了按年龄和性别划分的特定州儿童肥胖患病率,并校正了家长报告的儿童身高和体重偏差。
对象/方法:作为儿童肥胖干预成本效益研究(CHOICES)的一部分,我们利用2010年美国人口普查和美国社区调查(ACS)、2003 - 2004年和2007 - 2008年全国儿童健康调查(NSCH)(n = 133213)以及2005 - 2010年全国健康和营养检查调查(NHANES)(n = 9377;年龄2 - 17岁)的数据,得出了2005 - 2010年期间各州的儿童肥胖患病率估计值。使用非参数统计匹配算法,利用NHANES测量的身高和体重数据校正NSCH中家长报告的偏差。模型估计值与五个州(阿肯色州、佛罗里达州、马萨诸塞州、宾夕法尼亚州和田纳西州)的监测数据进行了验证,这五个州对不同年级的儿童进行了普查。
家长报告的身高和体重导致2 - 5岁男性儿童肥胖的高估最为严重(NSCH:42.36% vs NHANES:11.44%)。该组(12.81%)以及所有年龄和性别类别的CHOICES模型估计值与NHANES无统计学差异。我们模拟的肥胖患病率与五个验证州的测量数据紧密吻合,平均差异为0.64个百分点(范围:0.23 - 1.39),相关系数较高(r = 0.96,P = 0.009)。估计的特定州儿童肥胖患病率在11.0%至20.4%之间。
NSCH未经校正的儿童肥胖患病率估计值与全国测量数据差异很大,从2 - 5岁男性的高估278%到14 - 17岁女性的低估44%。本研究证明了CHOICES匹配方法校正家长报告的BMI数据偏差的有效性,并强调了公开发布2011至2012年NSCH最新数据的必要性。